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TeleSur- originally published on December 17th, 2016 – While leftist Jaime Roldos Aguilera went on to become Ecuador’s president, he was later killed in a plane crash under mysterious circumstances. Previously classified documents released earlier this week on Operation Condor have shed further light on how the U.S. controlled and meddled in Latin America politics in the 1970s, showing how the U.S. was tossing up the idea of “tinkering” with the outcome of elections in Ecuador as the victory of a left-wing president appeared likely.

The latest release of the Cold War-era documents detailed intelligence from July 24, 1978, where the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency looked into committing fraud in Ecuador’s 1979 election after left-wing candidate Jaime Roldos Aguilera won the most votes in 1978 but not enough to avoid a second runoff election scheduled for April 1979.

According to the source, embassy reports showed that Ecuador’s navy and president at the time, Alfredo Poveda, who came to power in a military coup, were “determined to have a clean election.” Ecuador’s military was also “determined to allow Roldos to participate in a runoff election,” according to reports from the Embassy and DIA.

In the runoff election, Roldos would be pitted against Sixto Duran Ballen, from the right-wing Social Christian Party. In the first round of elections, Raul Clemente Huerta, from the centrist Radical Liberal Party, received the third most votes.

Showing Washington’s clear disdain for left-wing candidates, the intelligence report states that “a DIA summary sees some possibility of tinkering the outcome for the second slot in the run-off since Huerta would have a better chance of defeating Roldas than the current apparent second place candidate Duran.”

Yet Roldos won the runoff election and become president in August 1979, the country’s first freely elected president without a background in the military. His campaign was built on a populist platform on human rights and labor reforms. During his tenure he brought in a number of important labor measures such as increasing the minimum wage and capping the country’s workweek to 40 hours.

He was well known for his advocacy of human rights around Latin America and pushed other Andean countries develop a charter of universal rights built on social justice and in particular non-intervention – something that did not sit well with the U.S. amid the fear of communism spreading during the cold war. Roldos also supported a number of left-wing movements around the region, again ruffling feathers within Washington. Roldos also declined Ronald Reagan’s presidential inauguration in 1981.

Roldos died in a plane crash in May 1981, which created accusations that it was a part of a U.S.-backed assassination. Panama President Omar Torrijos, who also was critical of the U.S. role in the region and was known for his human rights leadership, died two months later in a plane crash, raising similar accusations. After a CIA document was released in 2014, revealing that Ecuador was a part of Operation Condor, Ecuador’s attorney general’s office opened an investigation into his death.

“With this information, we are going to examine information of whether the accident which killed President Roldos was in fact an accident or was not an accident,” said Attorney General Galo Chiriboga told media after the investigation was launched. As of yet, there has been no official answer surronding the possible U.S. role in his death. The 2014 document states that Ecuador became part of Operation Condor in 1978, joining dictatorships of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay. Ecuador’s intelligence services and its armed forces agreed to share information with other countries and to take part in surveillance and psychological warfare, according to files.

*The Views Expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Silent Crow News editorial policy.